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Study Guide

📖 Core Concepts Case Management – Professional coordination of community‑based services (mental health, primary care, housing, employment, etc.) to meet a person’s biopsychosocial needs. Biopsychosocial Model – Treats mental health problems as the interaction of biological, psychological, and social factors. Assertive Community Treatment (ACT) – Intensive case‑management model that provides high‑frequency, multidisciplinary support to a defined population. Managed Care – Health‑system approach that uses case management to steer clients toward lower‑cost services (e.g., outpatient therapy vs. hospitalization). Personalization – Empowering clients to choose and shape the services they receive, reducing dependency on providers. Fidelity Measures – Standardized tools that assess whether a case‑management model is being delivered as intended. 📌 Must Remember Core Functions (Rose & Moore): Outreach → Assessment → Care Planning → Implementation → Monitoring → Review/Termination. Intensive Case Management ↓ Hospital admissions for severe mental illness. Managed‑Care Goal: Lower overall health‑care expenditures by substituting cheaper community services for acute care. ACT = Intensive Case Management for severe cases; it is a team‑based model with 24/7 availability. Personalization Principle: Client (or family) drives the coordination process; the case manager facilitates, not decides. 🔄 Key Processes Initial Assessment – Identify client’s wants, needs, and biopsychosocial risk factors. Care Planning – Co‑create a service plan with the client; set measurable goals. Service Linkage – Locate, secure, and arrange appropriate supports (therapy, housing, transport). Implementation – Activate the plan; case manager coordinates providers and monitors adherence. Progress Monitoring – Track outcomes, adjust services as needed; document in client record. Review & Termination – Evaluate goal attainment; decide on continuation, modification, or discharge. Re‑assessment Loop – If new needs emerge, start a fresh cycle (assessment → …). 🔍 Key Comparisons ACT vs. Standard Case Management Intensity: ACT provides daily/weekly contacts; standard CM may be monthly. Team: ACT uses multidisciplinary team; standard CM often a single manager. Target: ACT for severe mental illness; standard CM for broader client base. Managed Care CM vs. Clinical CM Primary Driver: Cost containment vs. therapeutic relationship. Service Choice: Low‑cost outpatient options vs. any clinically indicated service. ⚠️ Common Misunderstandings “Case manager makes decisions” – Actually facilitates; client/family drives the plan. “All case management is the same” – Models differ in contact frequency, team composition, and referral pathways. “Intensive CM = hospitalization” – It aims to prevent hospital stays by providing community supports. 🧠 Mental Models / Intuition “Bridge Builder” Model – Picture the case manager as a bridge linking the client’s needs on one side to services on the other; the bridge must be sturdy (skills), flexible (personalization), and regularly inspected (monitoring). “Cycle of Care” Loop – Visualize the process as a circle that never truly ends; each reassessment can spin a new, smaller circle of care. 🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases Severe Cognitive Impairment – May require a surrogate decision‑maker; the “client drives” principle shifts to the legal guardian. Rural Settings – Limited local services; case manager may need to arrange telehealth or transportation subsidies. Crisis Situations – Immediate safety overrides usual collaborative planning; temporary emergency interventions precede the regular cycle. 📍 When to Use Which Intensive/ACT – Choose for clients with severe, persistent mental illness, frequent hospitalizations, or homelessness. Standard Case Management – Suitable for moderate needs, stable housing, and when a single manager can coordinate services. Managed‑Care CM – Apply when the health system emphasizes cost‑effectiveness and has a tiered service menu (e.g., prefers outpatient therapy). Personalization Approach – Use whenever the client demonstrates capacity and desire to make service choices. 👀 Patterns to Recognize Re‑assessment Trigger – New crisis, medication change, or missed appointments → initiate a new cycle. Cost‑Savings Signal – Decline in hospital readmission rates after implementing intensive CM → indicator of model effectiveness. Fidelity Drop – Inconsistent team meetings or reduced contact frequency → potential loss of model integrity. 🗂️ Exam Traps “Case manager decides services” – Distractor: Confuses facilitator role with decision‑maker role. “ACT is only for medication management” – Wrong; ACT includes housing, employment, crisis response, etc. “Managed‑care case management eliminates therapeutic relationship” – Incorrect; therapeutic engagement remains essential, though cost considerations are added. “All case‑management models require daily contact” – Overgeneralization; only intensive models like ACT demand that frequency. --- If any heading appears to lack sufficient detail from the source outline, the placeholder “- Not enough information in source outline.” would be used, but the outline provided supports content for every required section.
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